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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Unblind

Unblind \Un*blind"\, v. t. [1st pref. un- + blind.] To free from blindness; to give or restore sight to; to open the eyes of. [R.]
--J. Webster (1607).

Wiktionary
unblind

vb. 1 (cx sometimes figurative English) To free from blindness. 2 (context business English) To remove the secrecy from (a bid).

Usage examples of "unblind".

He gave the order for the shapeshifter to unblind me in a cold, smooth voice.

One cannot resist the temptation to say again: If only Louis XIV had had the good sense, unblinded of pearls and gold and bigotry and some other things, to let the industrious, skilled Huguenots, flying from France after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, settle in Louisiana, instead of forcing them to swell the numbers of the English colonies on the Atlantic coast, and eventually assist them in taking the New France from which they had been debarred!

I went into the parlor to get a needle, and the door of THAT room was open, and children were running in and out, and the landlady, who was sweeping there, called cheerily to me to come in for the needle, and there, to my horror, not even covered with a face cloth, and with the sun blazing in through the unblinded window, lay that thing of terror, a corpse, on some chairs which were not even placed straight.

The trials were stopped immediately, the Phase Three data was unblinded for further analysis, and the FDA was informed, as were all the clinics participating in the trial.

Commissariat offices, creeping down by the low wall fearful that the soldier posted there might see him cross the fanshaped beam of light from the one unblinded window, he reached the Grass-plot.

Its windows were unblinded, and the light from within showed people inside.

Light unblinded, and busied himself in last touches to the lenses before twilight fell.

Now my mind was free of terror, my eyes unblinded by need, my heart at peace.